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Tuesday, 19 December 2006

In BookMooch news: today a woman in Missouri mooched my extra copy of Ada, or Ardor: A Family Chronicle by Vladimir Nabokov. That's an additional three points, bringing my total points to almost 12 (you get a tenth of a point each time you submit notification that you have received a book). That's enough for 12 books from Australians or six books from overseas. Yippee.

But I've had problems with books I've mooched. Two are still pending, and have been for over a month. I wonder if it's because, coming from overseas, they've been mailed surface.

Nevertheless, I recently received two mooched books. One is Rituals by Cees Nooteboom. I've been wanting to read something by this often-mentioned Dutch writer for some time. My favourite visual arts critic, Sebastian Smee, has named him in reviews. Well, I found an Australian BookMooch member with a copy, and it arrived within days. That's the advantage of mooching from people in your own country: fast delivery.

The other book that arrived recently is What It Takes: The Way to the White House by Richard Ben Cramer. This is a work of literary journalism published in 1992 that takes a behind-the-scenes look at the struggle that was the 1988 presidential election. I came across Cramer when reading The New New Journalism, which I reviewed in September.

If you want to see my BookMooch inventory, click here.

5 comments:

  1. " Two are still pending, and have been for over a month. I wonder if it's because, coming from overseas, they've been mailed surface."

    Yes, almost everyone from the USA on BookMooch will send books surface mail, and it takes typically 6 to 8 weeks to arrive. It's *much* cheaper, about 1/3rd the cost. I use it all the time, and 2 months is typical, otherwise we're looking at $10 USD to send each book.

    - John from BookMooch

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  2. Hm, I've only read Lolita and Pale Fire by Nabokov. I heard he's extremely stubborn about completely accurate translations of texts.

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  3. Oh, and I love Umberto Eco too. I recently read his How to Travel with a Salmon - no one is better in merging the profane and the profound than him.

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  4. You're right, but don't forget he's been dead for just on 30 years, so you should most correctly use the past tense. He was very particular about a lot of things.

    His idea of translation is best exemplified by the one he did of Pushkin's Eugene Onegin. Very different from your standard rhyming English translation, but a lot of fun to read. The footnotes are also very good fun. He researched the voice to use extensively, going through the works of dozens of eighteenth-century English poets to find the mot juste.

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  5. John: one was sent on October 4 and the other was sent on October 18.

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